1962

Fifty years ago Jamaica, Western Samoa (now Samoa), Algeria, Rwanda, Burundi, Trinidad and Tobago, and Uganda all gained their independence, as did the Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen). John H. Glenn, Jr., aboard Friendship 7, became the first American astronaut to orbit Earth, and James Meredith persevered against race riots and race-based objections to become the first African American student to attend the University of Mississippi. The dangers of pollution came to public awareness with the publication of Silent Spring by biologist Rachel Carson. The three-year Second Vatican Council (or Vatican II), convened by Pope John XXIII, met for its first session. It was a watershed year in popular culture: the Australian Ballet was founded in Melbourne; in Britain, Ringo Starr became the drummer for the pop band the Beatles, which released its first single, “Love Me Do”; the Rolling Stones played their first concert together; and the first James Bond movie, Dr. No, hit the theatres; and in the U.S. both Bob Dylan and the Beach Boys delivered their first albums (Bob Dylan and Surfin’ Safari, respectively). Much of the world was caught up in the Cold War, which nearly became hot during the Cuban missile crisis, and the clandestine special-operations force the SEALs was formed by the U.S. Navy.

Cuban missile crisis

Commemorations of the 50th anniversary of the Cuban missile crisis, in which the U.S. and the Soviet Union came to the brink of nuclear war, included the creation of a Web site, cubanmissilecrisis.org, by Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, to educate students and others interested in the event and its implications and a project by historian Michael Dobbs with Foreign Policy magazine to post on the microblogging site Twitter a series of updates that might have been written had the same technology existed in 1962.

In October 1962, just 18 months after a U.S. effort to overthrow the regime led by Fidel Castro in Cuba, the U.S. government learned that the Soviet Union was clandestinely placing in Cuba medium-range ballistic missiles that were capable of reaching the U.S. mainland. Pres. John F. Kennedy convened a group of foreign-policy and military experts to consider how to respond. Though some preferred a course of air strikes against the missile sites and/or an invasion of Cuba, Kennedy chose a naval blockade of the island to prevent any further military buildup, and he announced this action in a televised speech in which he also warned that any military strike against the Western Hemisphere from Cuba would result in retaliation against the Soviet Union. Soviet ships en route to Cuba turned back, and Kennedy received two letters from Soviet Prime Minister Nikita Khrushchev, the first saying that the missiles would be removed from Cuba in return for a U.S. pledge never to invade the island country, and the second saying that the U.S. also had to dismantle intermediate-range missiles based in Turkey and aimed toward the Soviet Union. The U.S. responded with an agreement not to invade Cuba if within 24 hours an intention to remove the missiles was communicated and with a secret pledge to withdraw its missiles from Turkey. On October 28 Khrushchev agreed. The blockade was lifted on November 20; the missiles were completely removed from Cuba by the end of the year; and U.S. missiles in Turkey were withdrawn in April of the following year.

Navy SEALs

The 50th anniversary of the founding of the special operations force the U.S. Navy SEALs was observed during Fleet Week San Diego (September 8–October 14). A ceremony also took place on January 27 at the Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek–Fort Story in Norfolk, Va.

In 1961 U.S. Pres. John F. Kennedy expressed the need for the armed forces to develop the ability to engage in unconventional warfare. In response, in January 1962 the navy created two SEAL teams made up of members of the underwater demolition teams, one of many special-operations units created during World War II. The SEAL (for Sea, Air, and Land) mission was to conduct clandestine and counterguerrilla operations in maritime and riverine environments. SEAL Team 1 was based in Coronado, Calif., to support the Pacific fleet, and SEAL Team 2 was based in Little Creek, Va., to support the Atlantic fleet. SEAL units shortly were deployed to conduct training and counterguerrilla operations during the Vietnam War. It was not until the late 1960s that popular news media were authorized to write stories about SEAL activities. The number of SEAL units increased; in 2012 there were nine active-duty SEAL teams and two reserve teams. SEAL units supported most U.S. military engagements, including the protection of merchant shipping in the Persian Gulf (1987–88) during the Iran-Iraq War and the expulsion of Iraqi forces from Kuwait during the 1990–91 Persian Gulf War. They were active in the Iraq War from 2003 and in the Afghanistan War from 2001. In the latter war, members of SEAL Team 6 in May 2011 killed al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in northern Pakistan.

Notable Anniversaries of 2012: Year In Review 2012. (2015). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved from http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/1893232/Notable-Anniversaries-of-2012-Year-In-Review-2012/308348/1962

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